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Wonder Woman 12x15\" signed print By Frank Forte Pop Surrealism DC Comics For Sale


Wonder Woman  12x15\
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Wonder Woman 12x15\" signed print By Frank Forte Pop Surrealism DC Comics:
$21.25

WONDER WOMAN
12\"X15\" LASER PRINT SIGNED BY ARTIST FRANK FORTE
BASED ON 1970S SUPERHERO AND ROMANCE COMICS. INSPIRED BY POP ART AND NEO POP STREET ART.
PRINTED ON A THICK PAPER STOCK. SHIPPED BAGGED AND BOARDED FLAT IN VARDBOARD.
I WILL COMBINE ORDERS FOR MULTIPLE PRINT ORDERS. AT LEAST 20 PRINTS CAN SHIP FOR THE SAME PRICE.
Item makes a great Holiday or Birthday Gift. Will ship in time for the Holidays
Will ship flat with extra cardboard

Lowbrow, orlowbrow art, describes an undergroundvisual artmovement that arose in theLos Angeles, Californiaarea in the late 1960s.[1]It is a populist art movement with its cultural roots inunderground comix,punk music,tiki culture,graffiti, andhot-rodcultures of the street.[2]It is also often known by the namepop surrealism.[3]Lowbrow art often has a sense of humor – sometimes the humor is gleeful, sometimes impish, and sometimes it is a sarcastic comment.[4]

Most lowbrow artworks arepaintings, but there are alsotoys,digital art, andsculpture.

Some of the first artists to create what came to be known as lowbrow art were underground cartoonists likeRobert WilliamsandGary Panter. Early shows were in alternativegalleriesin New York and Los Angeles such as Psychedelic Solutions Gallery inGreenwich Village, New York City which was run by Jacaeber Kastor,[5]La Luz de Jesusrun by Billy Shire[6]and01 galleryin Hollywood, run by John Pochna.[5]The movement steadily grew from its beginning, with hundreds of artists adopting this style. As the number of artists grew, so did the number of galleries showing Lowbrow. In 1992 Greg Escalante helped orchestrate the first formal gallery exhibition to take low brow art seriously; painterAnthony Ausgang’ssolo show \"Looney Virtues” at the Julie Rico Gallery inSanta Monica. The Bess Cutler Gallery also went on to show important artists and helped expand the kind of art that was classified as Lowbrow. The lowbrow magazineJuxtapoz, launched in 1994 by Robert Williams, Greg Escalante, andEric Swenson, has been a mainstay of writing on lowbrow art and has helped shape and expand the movement.[7]

Writers have noted that there are now distinctions to be drawn between how lowbrow manifests itself in different regions and places. Some see a distinct U.S. \"west coast\" lowbrow style, which is more heavily influenced by tiki, underground comix and hot rod car-culture than elsewhere. As the lowbrow style has spread around the world, it has been intermingled with the tendencies in the visual arts of those places in which it has established itself. As lowbrow develops, there may be a branching (as there was with previous art movements) into different strands and even whole new art movements.

In an article in the February 2006 issue of his magazineJuxtapoz, Robert Williams took credit for originating the term \"lowbrow art.\" He stated that in 1979Gilbert Sheltonof the publisherRip Off Pressdecided to produce a book featuring Willams\' paintings. Williams said he decided to give the book the self-deprecating titleThe Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams, since no authorized art institution would recognize his type of art. \"Lowbrow\" was thus used by Williams in opposition to \"highbrow.\" He said the name then stuck, even though he feels it is inappropriate. Williams refers to the movement as \"cartoon-tainted abstract surrealism.\"[8]Lately, Williams has begun referring to his own work as \"Conceptual Realism.\"[9]


POP SURREALISM

Highly polished imagery inspired by cartoon characters and scenery – that is how one could describeLowbrowart, also known asPopSurrealism, but the truth is that this unconventional movement is much more than that. Are we even entitled to calling it a movement? Many acclaimed critics and respectable institutions, put in charge to decide what gets to be accepted as art and what does not fit in the mainstream demand of museums, galleries and even collectors, would put Lowbrow in the latter category without thinking twice. But like many movements before it, Lowbrow artdoes not care about being recognized by the art world as legitimate; if anything, Lowbrow artists wrote their own rules in an unapologetic way, rules that were clear enough to make this whole creative field stand on its own without a single problem. Because of its roots in the underground culture, Lowbrow / Pop Surrealism became a populist matter, inspired by such vast variety of topics and aesthetics that it made itself easily relatable to a large number of artists and admirers. So what exactly is it that makes Lowbrow art so distinct and alluring?

The Advent of Lowbrow Art

Born in the shady corners of Los Angeles in the late 1970s, Lowbrow originated in the artworks of underground cartoonists that were put on display in alternative galleries in New York and California. Because of their particular artistic approach, they weren’t perceived as “highbrow” or intellectual art – mainly because they were based on the rawness ofunderground comix, the rebellion of punk music, the hot rod and surf culture of the West Coast and, of course, stylized cartoons and comics. In fact, it would seem as though Its Highness the art world was not particularly fond of this Lowbrow kind of humor, one that can be found inJohn Waters movies, or Acid house flyers, circus posters,kitsch art, Kustom Kulture, Japanese anime, second-rate horror movies,psychedelic artpieces and evengraffitiandstreet art. As a consequence, Lowbrow art and its self-taught practitioners joined the club of the “outlaws” like illustrators,tattoo artistsandcomic book artists, and enjoyed its own status of an academically neglected movement which nevertheless thrived in a self-made environment. As such, Lowbrow art also managed to find home in many places around the globe and reflect their visual tendencies, thus evolving into many different branches and individual aesthetics.

Cartoon-Tainted Abstract Surrealism

Although it did not have an official name until the beginning of the 1990s, Lowbrow art was already somewhat present inpopular cultureduring the 1960s too, as its traces could be found in the works of underground comix cartoonists like R. Crumb, S. Clay Wilson, Victor Moscoso and Robert Williams. Ever since its earliest days, Lowbrow was dedicated to poking fun at the conventional matters of any kind, using humor and sarcasm as its strongest tools. Persistent in vision, Lowbrow created its own subversive culture filled withabstract imagery and dreamy cartoon characterspainted and drawn with impressive technical ability – one that surely did not deserve to be ignored. The accomplishments of Lowbrow / Pop Surrealism creatives was firmly recognized, however, bythe Juxtapoz magazine, founded in 1994 by the aforementionedRobert Williams. A pioneer and the biggest figure of the movement, he claims to have coined the term “lowbrow” and there is nobody to dispute that, as the support that his magazine has given to the artists and the production at large is still immense and important. Juxtapoz magazine gave these artworks visibility, popularity and a background in writing that was somewhat critical, and it freed this form of art from under the “dictatorship” of the New York scene and its predisposed rules of what art should mean and look like.

Lowbrow Goes Pop Surrealism

Following the rise of Juxtapoz Magazine, as well as another seminal publication calledHi-Fructose, a number of individuals within the Lowbrow art movement began breaking away from the raw, gritty representation of cartoons andcounterculture. Putting their classical artistic training to use, they started creating their artwork with more sophistication; the goal was to producea “more beautiful” imagery, while at the same time not abandoning the core of Lowbrow – its underground references. Despite their master painter techniques, these creatives did not reach the realms of the “snobbish” Highbrow – nor was this their intention – but they nevertheless managed to blur the line between low and high art, giving way to a new subclass of pieces that could be defined asPop Surrealism. The invention of the term was attributed toartistKenny Scharf, who used it to describe his own paintings, an unlikely, yet rather successful mix of Pop art andSurrealism.





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A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011